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A Frederick Douglass Reading List
Reading recommendations from a lifelong education.
by
Jaime Fuller
via
Lapham’s Quarterly
on
February 21, 2019
That Beautiful Barbed Wire
The concertina wire Trump loves at the border has a long, troubling legacy in the West.
by
Rebecca Onion
via
Slate
on
November 6, 2018
Howard Zinn’s Anti-Textbook
Teachers and students love "A People’s History of the United States." But it’s just as limited as the textbooks it replaces.
by
Sam Wineburg
via
Slate
on
September 16, 2018
“The Town Was Us”
How the New England town became the mythical landscape of American democracy.
by
Garrett Dash Nelson
via
Places Journal
on
July 1, 2018
How Supreme Court Nominations Lost Their Apolitical Pretense
It used to be that nobody would admit to opposing a nominee for ideological reasons. Should we be happy that illusion is over?
by
David Greenberg
via
Politico Magazine
on
June 30, 2018
Standing on the Brink: The Secret War Scare of 1983
Remembering a time when a toxic cocktail of threats, fear, and misunderstanding nearly led us down the path to Armageddon.
by
Jill Kastner
via
The Nation
on
May 31, 2018
partner
Republicans Think Celebrities Can Win Them the Black Vote. They’re Wrong.
Kanye West won't win Trump black support. But it will cost West his.
by
Leah Wright Rigueur
via
Made By History
on
May 10, 2018
partner
Today is a National Day of Prayer. Should That be Legal?
How solid is the wall between church and state?
by
David B. Gowler
via
Made By History
on
May 3, 2018
partner
The Democratic Program That Killed Liberalism
How Democrats like Zell Miller and Bill Clinton exacerbated inequality in education
by
Jonathan D. Cohen
via
Made By History
on
March 28, 2018
partner
How American Slavery Echoed Russian Serfdom
Russian serfdom and American slavery ended within two years of each other; the defenders of these systems of bondage surprisingly shared many of the same arguments.
by
Matthew Wills
,
Peter Kolchin
,
William C. Hine
via
JSTOR Daily
on
February 27, 2018
The Man Who Put Andrew Jackson in Trump’s Oval Office
Historian Walter Russell Mead has become the favorite Trump whisperer for everyone from Steve Bannon to Tom Cotton.
by
Susan B. Glasser
via
Politico Magazine
on
January 22, 2018
partner
The New York Times Journalist Who Secretly Led the Charge Against Liberal Media Bias
The untold story of the double agent who attacked the paper from within.
by
Sid Bedingfield
via
Made By History
on
December 11, 2017
original
The Problem with "Reagan Democrats"
Does the trope obscure more than it illuminates about the 2016 election?
by
Leah Wright Rigueur
,
Brent Cebul
on
October 19, 2017
America’s Dangerously Shallow Understanding of the Holocaust
It’s treated as an all-purpose symbol of evil, not a series of historical events to be reckoned with.
by
Andrea Pitzer
via
Vox
on
May 4, 2017
The Immigration-Obsessed, Polarized, Garbage-Fire Election of 1800
A madman versus a crook? Unexpected twists? Fake news? Welcome to the election of 1800.
by
A. Roger Ekirch
via
Longreads
on
March 28, 2017
Black and Woke in Capitalist America: Revisiting Robert Allen’s "Black Awakening"... for New Times’ Sake
A look into neocolonialism in modern America.
by
N. D. B. Connolly
via
Social Science Research Council
on
March 7, 2017
From Boston's Resistance to an American Revolution
How a Boston rebellion became an American Revolution is a story too seldom told because it is one we take for granted.
by
Mark Boonshoft
via
New York Public Library
on
February 28, 2017
Draining the Swamp
Washington may be the only city on Earth that lobbied itself into existence.
by
Ted Widmer
via
The New Yorker
on
January 19, 2017
#FEELTHEBIRNEY
The most important third party in the history of American politics is one you may never have heard of before.
by
W. Caleb McDaniel
via
Commonplace
on
September 4, 2016
partner
Mother's Little Helper
How feminists transformed Valium from a wonder drug to a symbol of medical sexism.
via
BackStory
on
May 20, 2016
"Jim Crow Must Go"
Thousands of New York City students staged a one-day boycott to protest segregation – and it barely made the history books.
by
Matt Delmont
via
Salon
on
February 3, 2016
partner
Invisible Cities, Continued
The 19th century recovery of John Winthrop's sermon, "A City on a Hill."
via
BackStory
on
January 22, 2016
How a Young Joe Biden Turned Liberals Against Integration
Forty years ago, the Senate supported school busing—until a 32-year-old changed his mind.
by
Jason Sokol
via
Politico Magazine
on
August 4, 2015
What Does It Mean To Make America "Christian?"
The "Christian Amendment" and the push for Christianity to be established as the national religion of the United States.
by
Charles Louis Richter
via
(Ir)religion In America
on
February 26, 2015
An Enemy Until You Need a Friend
The role of "big government" in American history.
by
Steven Conn
via
Origins
on
November 1, 2014
Dorothea Dix and Franklin Pierce: The Battle for the Mentally Ill
Dorothea Dix and Franklin Pierce were in many ways ideological soulmates, but he would not help her effort to improve conditions for the mentally ill.
via
New England Historical Society
on
February 8, 2014
Sociology and the Presidency
In 1979, Carter's "malaise speech," shaped by sociological insights, sought national unity but clashed with Reagan's appeal to individualism.
by
Matthew Braswell
via
The Fifth Floor
on
October 25, 2013
Tax Time
Why we pay.
by
Jill Lepore
via
The New Yorker
on
November 19, 2012
The Manly Sport of American Politics
19th-century Americans abandoned the English phrasing of "standing" for election and begin to describe candidates who "run" for office. The race was on.
by
Kenneth Cohen
via
Commonplace
on
April 1, 2012
partner
Fighting for Home
How the idea of “home” motivated Confederate soldiers, and strengthened their resolve to fight.
via
BackStory
on
March 31, 2011
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